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I'm testing my Adobe AIR app for iOS across 4 different devices: an iPad 1, iPad 3, iPad Mini, and iPad Air, signing with a wildcard development provisioning profile. The app installs and runs just fine on the iPad 3 and iPad Mini, but I get "ApplicationVerificationFailed" when I try to debug on the iPad 1 and iPad Air, and "A valid provisioning profile for this executable was not found," when I try to install the app through XCode, for those two devices only.

The iPad 1 has historically worked OK, though we haven't had use for it in months (in fact, I only plugged it in just to try a different device when I couldn't get the iPad Air to work.)

The iPad Air we got earlier this week, and I've been struggling to get my AIR apps installed on it.

A demo app written solely in XCode installs/debugs just fine on the iPad Air.

I've registered the iPad Air in the Apple Developer center, updated my Team & App development profiles, installed those profiles on all my devices, and updated my AIR project properties with the new .mobileprovision file.

I unzipped the .ipa, looked through the embedded.mobileprovision XML, and found my device's UDID under the ProvisionedDevices key.

I'm really stuck here. Does anyone have any suggestions?

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  • Out of curiosity, how did you get the devices' UDIDs? As of iOS 7, you must do it with XCode or iTunes. The iOS API that allowed for it was deprecated in 6 and removed in 7. If you use an app to get the UDID now, it will return a number that starts with FFFFFF (or something like that)
    – Josh
    Jun 25, 2014 at 15:41
  • I used iTunes to find the UDIDs.
    – Phillip
    Jun 25, 2014 at 17:15
  • Using ad-hoc distribution? Or otherwise making sure that the provisioning profile is on the device in question?
    – Craig
    Jun 25, 2014 at 22:10
  • I'm using a (wildcard) development provision. Both that provision and my team provision are installed on all devices.
    – Phillip
    Jun 25, 2014 at 22:41

1 Answer 1

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I ended up starting over from scratch. I deleted all my certificates & provisions, and entirely rebuilt my development Mac.

I suspect that the issue involved my having multiple Mac users linked to the same developer user account. One obvious issue: each user had a different set of private keys for the certificates, with no user having a full set of keys. I also occasionally had file permission issues on that Mac, with one user being abandoned entirely, because he kept creating files with messed up permissions.

Or it could've been a very simple certificate issue, and I just needed to revoke/reissue/rebuild.

In future, I'm only going to have 1 developer user on my Mac, and I'm going to let XCode manage my certificates and provisions as much as I can.

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